Hemingway Bar: Cuba’s Clever Daiquiri Diplomacy
A new bar is opening in DC, called “Hemingway’s Bar”, in the invite only Cuban Interests Section. This is vastly better public diplomacy than the US-Cuba tit-for-tat shenanigans of the past.
A new bar is opening in DC, called “Hemingway’s Bar”, in the invite only Cuban Interests Section. This is vastly better public diplomacy than the US-Cuba tit-for-tat shenanigans of the past.
Speaking at Offutt Air Base, Nebraska — Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has disconcertingly started his tenure fear-mongering about al Qaeda as a justification not to go beyond the President’s proposed $400 billion cuts to the Defense Department over ten years.
Convicted spy Jonathan Pollard has numerous advocates close to President Obama advocating his release from a life sentence. Pollard betrayed his fellow US citizens and should only be released if he can be used as bargaining chip to move US interests forward — meaning a real deal on an Israel-Palestine two state arrangement.
Kenneth Cole nails it. h/t to Bob Witeck. — Steve Clemons is Washington Editor at Large at The Atlantic, where this post first appeared.
In August 2005, because of growing US political resistance on national security grounds, the China National Oil Company (CNOC) withdrew its bid to purchase the US oil company, UNOCAL.
A number of correspondents checked in with America’s biggest financier, the People’s Republic of China, after President Obama signed the debt ceiling deal passed by the Senate and House of Representatives.
The Afghanistan Study Group has issued an interactive chart on key opinion leaders and their views on how far America’s limbs should be plunged into the Afghanistan quagmire. The US is currently on target to spend $119 billion in Afghanistan, which itself only has a GDP of $14 billion.
Anne-Marie Slaughter has put out some interesting tidbits from a recent Singapore-based conference foray focused on China’s future. Slaughter, who just left her perch as Director of Policy Planning at the State Department, and is now back teaching at Princeton University, has joined The Atlantic as a correspondent.
Senator Jim DeMint was not one of the major political players whose every move we watched this weekend, but he was the animator of much of the high stakes drama over raising the debt ceiling and cutting the national debt.
The standoff over the debt ceiling continues. Back and forth. Tit for tat. No progress. Paralysis. Stuff is happening in the world — but there is absolutely no bandwidth for anything other than the debt ceiling debate.